17 S.E.2d 306 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1941
Under the act (Ga. L. 1937, pp. 528, 530; Code Ann. § 114-403) amending section 2(d) of the workmen's compensation law relatively to subrogation, the amount of compensation due by the employer is not reducible by the amount paid by an alleged third party tort-feasor in a voluntary settlement.
The act of 1922 (Ga. L. 1922, pp. 185, 187), providing for subrogation (section 2(d) of the workmen's compensation law), was as follows: "When an employee coming under provisions of this act receives an injury for which compensation is payable under this act and which injury was caused under circumstances creating a legal liability in some person other than the employer to pay damages in respect thereto, the employee, or beneficiary, may take *199 proceedings both against that person to recover damages and against the employer for compensation, but the amount of compensation to which he is entitled under this act shall be reduced by the amount of damages recovered. If the employee, or beneficiary of the employee, in such case recovers compensation under this act, the employer by whom compensation was paid, or the party who was called upon to pay the compensation, shall be entitled to indemnity from the person so liable to pay damages as aforesaid, and shall be subrogated to the rights of the employee to recover therefrom, to the extent of the compensation."
In American Mutual Liability Insurance Co. v. Wigley,
The question for decision here is what the General Assembly intended *200
in passing this amendment. A consideration of what the evil was which it intended to remedy, and what it did in the effort to remedy the evil, will demonstrate the solution to the query. The evil under the original law was that the amount of compensation due was not reducible by the amount paid an employee by a third party in a voluntary settlement. Instead of remedying the situation by providing that a legal liability was not necessary before the amount paid as compensation could be reduced by the amount paid by a third party, the General Assembly accentuated the necessity for the establishment of a legal liability and prescribed the manner and method of its establishment. The legislature is conclusively presumed to have intended to pass a constitutional act. Suppose for the sake of argument that the amendment in question had been held to be constitutional. In the event of a voluntary settlement it was clearly the intention of the legislature that a suit should be brought, despite the payment, to establish the liability and the amount thereof. Suppose the voluntary settlement in a given case was $500, and the amount of compensation paid was $1000; that the carrier sued the third party tort-feasor who had made the voluntary settlement, to recover whatever it could up to the amount of compensation paid, and recovered a judgment for $1000. Which amount did the legislature intend should be computed in reducing the amount of compensation due? In the premises it is clear that the amount of the recovery in the suit authorized is the amount to be considered, and not the amount of the voluntary settlement. In these circumstances it is clear that the intention of the lawmakers was to give to the word "recovered" the same meaning fixed upon it by the Supreme Court in the Wigley case, supra, although in other settings and under different circumstances it could be held to have a different meaning. It seems inescapable that the legislature intended that the compensation should be reduced only by the amount recovered judicially in the action sought to be authorized by the amendment. In Lloyd-Adams Inc.
v. Liberty Mutual Ins. Co.,
The contention that the amendment should be interpreted after eliminating the part held to be unconstitutional is without merit. The legislature passed the whole amendment, not just what is left after the decision in the Lloyd-Adams case. Obviously its intention is to be ascertained by what it did, not by what the Supreme Court did. The court erred in denying the appeal from the Industrial Board.
Judgment reversed. Stephens, P. J., concurs. Sutton, J.,concurs in the judgment.